Thursday, June 27, 2024

What is ‘Dictatorship of the Proletariat’?

As a tyrannical government takes more power, pushing socialism/communism as best alternatives to capitalism, citizens must stop and think rationally, how does all this free stuff they are promised work, and how does the “dictatorship of the proletariat” work in real life? They only need to look at history to find out.

Coined originally by Karl Marx, as an expression of the dictatorship of the majority class, the dictatorship of the proletariat uses violence, brutality, imprisonment, and abject fear to rule and to keep the disarmed masses into compliance and oppression.

The majority class was comprised of all the poor and downtrodden citizens who had to listen daily to lectures on the wonders of communism while their bellies gurgled from lack of nutritious food and sometimes any food at all.

The communists in the elite class who controlled the country had a strong grasp on everyone thanks to a huge and well-paid army, security police, regular police, economic police, central bank officers, and paid informers who wanted a few extra crumbs from their Communist Party handlers. The elites in control did not have the internet or social platforms to spy on their citizens, they really had to work hard to keep a close tab on them.

The Marxist government offered positions of influence to those who could trace their lineage two generations. For security personnel, a person of “pure Romanian blood” had to trace back three generations of families born and living within the borders. If Romanians were married to people of other ethnic groups, the undesirables, were excluded from any government positions or promotions.

According to Ion Mihai Pacepa, “only a few token Jews, Hungarians, and Germans [had] been kept in high positions for propaganda purposes.” They could never have had access to the dear leader’s “secrets.”

A huge ethnic group, at least two million strong and highly cohesive, the Hungarians living in Transylvania, was the “most hated group” by Ceausescu. The dear leader quietly dispersed them in the 1960s throughout Romania to divide them. He borrowed this idea from Leonid Brezhnev who had dispersed to Siberia over a million Romanians living in the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic.

One of the ways in which the dear leader dispensed with undesirables, dissenters, and political opponents was to label them political criminals. In this category ordinary people could be arrested for embezzlement, ‘speculation’ of goods in short supply (and they were all in short supply), dereliction of job duties, theft from work, or whatever reason they could concoct to fit a specific individual. “With imagination and creativity, once a fellow is in prison, he’s yours,” the dear leader is alleged to have said.

He advised his underlings, “It is not only on the street that accidents can happen. It is not just free men who get sick and die.” Thus, Imagination and creativity became the standard operating procedure of the security police.

Car accidents, pedestrian accidents, work accidents, suicides, and hunting accidents were also common even though few people owned a car, a hunting rifle, or the desire to kill themselves.

Jail cells were places where savage beatings, poisonings, and suicides took place. The most lethal was radioactive poisoning added to the arsenal in 1970 under the code name ‘Radu.’ “The radiation dosage is said to generate lethal forms of cancer.” (Pacepa, Red Horizons, p. 146)

Communists have never harbored love for the little people they pretended to defend, the proletariat who allegedly put them in power. It is debatable that they did put them in power, considering the violent tactics the Bolsheviks employed to get a majority of voters to elect them.

Communists also harbored scant love and loyalty for their own flesh and blood. One glaring example was the dear leader himself. He had built his mom a two-story house after her husband passed away, an elegantly furnished abode with servants. The octogenarian sat for years on a bench, “waiting to catch a glimpse of her son walking with someone in his garden.”

Pacepa wrote that “he never greeted her, absorbed in his own thoughts, and only after her death a few months earlier did he notice his mother’s absence.”

How could anyone in their right mind believe this communist monster that he cared about his little people, the proletariat, when he starved them to death and denied them the most basic human rights?

People should heed the lessons of the past of socialist republics ruled by the Communist Party as a warning to stay away from such a form of government and its accompanying disastrous centralized economy.

In the last four years, white Americans have found themselves excluded from many jobs and advancement in the corporate world and in government. Black and brown people, and sexual deviants are given priority for hire regardless of qualifications or experience.

Most commercials are staffed by black and brown actors, with a few Asians. White people, if they appear at all, are bumbling idiots who must be educated by the people with more melanin in their skin.

At the end of the day, what is the role of the proletariat in this “dictatorship of the proletariat?” It is, simply put, a communist dictatorship, a communist police state.

The proletariat was never in control, never got anything for free, they had to work hard for meager salaries, they were just useful tools and idiots in their own communist enslavement. Unfortunately, Americans are not paying attention to those who survived communist dictatorships and escaped them and do not understand the false rhetoric and blatant lies of Democrat communist activists and their mainstream media.

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